In the gigantic edition of "The complete cartoons of the New Yorker" Ed. R.
Mankoff, 2004, introducing the illustrations that correspond to The Fourth
Decade (1955-1964), John Updike wrote:
" There were stirrings even under the anodyne Eisenhower. In popular
culture, early rock drowned our mellow remnants of the big-band era; in
painting, the stern and heroic canvases of Abstract Expressionism morphed into
the cheerful junk art of Pop art and the deadpan quiddity of Minimalism; in
writing, baroque mandarins such as Bellow and Nabokov added new, ligther notes
to the sonorities of our native naturalism. A certain lightness and
gaiety, indeed, permeated the décor and the mindset of a hardworking land....
The magnitude of free-world leadership weighed on the collective mind: "The
Russians have the Intercontinental Ballistic missile, and we have the
Edsel."
(excerpts, page 240-242).